Venture capitalist John Doerr, a Sun Microsystems board member since the computer maker's founding in 1982, will resign that post on Nov. 2.
John Doerr
"On Aug. 30, 2006...Doerr notified Sun that he will not be standing for re-election as a director of Sun when his term expires on Nov. 2, 2006," Sun said Wednesday in a regulatory filing.
Doerr, 55, is a partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, a storied Silicon Valley venture capital firm. He also helped finance and is a board member at Google, Amazon.com, Intuit and other companies.
"(I) resigned for more time with family. The kids grow so fast," Doerr said in an interview. He also lavished praise on the company and board he's leaving: "Sun's in great shape: revenue momentum building, hot new products, a terrific management team and a strong board of directors."
He has stuck with Sun through several major changes, including the company's shift in the 1990s from a workstation maker to a server maker, its dot-com rise and fall, and the change to new Chief Executive Jonathan Schwartz. Although Sun has shown recent market share gains and is in the midst of the latest of a series of major layoffs, the company isn't considered to be out of the woods yet financially.
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